Saturday, May 18, 2019

Yoga is not a religion

Yoga itself is neither a religion nor part of any other religious system. Whether it is Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Christianity, Islam, worship of fire, Confucianism, Taoism, or any other form, the world's major religions are developing yoga. The great people of all these religions have gained spiritual experience through painstaking training and discipline, which is functionally similar, which is why the foundations of all religious beliefs in the world are universal.

All religious teachers use their own language and words to express that the soul is immortal, and that it comes from a much higher source than oneself. We can bring this sacred source Brahmin, Ishwara, God, God, Supreme Existence, Universal Spirit, Divine Principles, Ultimate Reality, Supreme Truth, or give it any other name. But all religions believe that the individual soul belongs to this sacred source, which can be realized by the former, and this understanding brings eternal happiness and freedom.

The things that these realized souls say or write come from the source of sacredness, which is beyond the intellectual understanding of ordinary people. In fact, their words are what the sacred source itself says. These people have become the driving force of the country. The knowledge they reveal is this or that kind of yoga. Therefore, all the teachings of the great masters of different religions are similar, leading to the same truth.

My yoga is universal, and yoga is not necessarily bound by any particular religion. If he or she chooses so, or does not accept any religious beliefs at all, the yogi may belong to any religion. In fact, yoga science is much older than any religion. No religious philosophy or dogma can let humans understand the true self or provide redemption. This can only be achieved through more advanced mental training such as yoga.

Indeed, India has always been a traditional home for yoga, but this does not mean that yoga practice is just a monopoly of Indians. Everyone and everyone, regardless of their religion, race or country, has the right to practice it, because yoga transcends all these artificial boundaries and distinctions. It does not associate a person with a particular dogma or cultural belief that leads to prejudice, but rather directs a person to directly experience the truth at the individual level independently.

In addition, yoga enables individuals to build relationships with sacredness based on their psychological inclinations. The practice of yoga, even today, provides practical and practical teachings for all religions and cultures around the world, and is itself the best proof of its extensive approach and universality.




Orignal From: Yoga is not a religion

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